MT
MyopiaTracker Clinical Team
Reviewed by Dr. Balamurali Vasudevan, BSOptom, PhD, FAAO, MBA · Last updated: April 2026

Does Screen Time Cause Myopia?
What the Evidence Actually Shows

Short answer: Screen time is associated with higher myopia rates — but probably not for the reason you think. The issue isn't the screen itself. It's what screens replace: outdoor time. Light intensity matters more than viewing distance.

10,000+
Lux of natural light outdoors (vs 300–500 lux indoors) — the difference that drives myopia protection
40 min
Additional outdoor time per school day that reduced myopia onset by ~50% in a Taiwanese RCT (Wu et al. 2018)
Myopia odds increase for children spending >3 hours/day on near tasks vs <1 hour, after adjusting for outdoor time

The screen vs outdoor time distinction

When researchers try to separate screen time from outdoor time in statistical models, the relationship between screens and myopia weakens considerably. The strongest finding is not "screens cause myopia" but rather "low outdoor time causes myopia, and screens correlate with low outdoor time."

A child reading a physical book for 3 hours indoors has a similar myopia risk to a child watching a screen for 3 hours indoors — both are doing near work in low light without the protective exposure of outdoor time. The screen itself is not the primary driver.

Why outdoor light is protective

The leading mechanism is retinal dopamine release triggered by bright light exposure. Outdoor light (10,000–100,000 lux, depending on cloud cover) signals the retina to suppress axial elongation. Indoor light — even bright artificial lighting — does not reach the threshold needed to trigger this response meaningfully.

Viewing distance matters secondarily: extended close focus (reading, screens at arm's length or closer) creates sustained ciliary muscle contraction and peripheral hyperopic defocus, which may signal eye growth. But this effect is substantially smaller than the outdoor light effect.

What the clinical recommendations say

Reddit Reality Check

r/myopia frequently asks: "Will limiting my child's iPad time stop their myopia from getting worse?"

The honest answer: limiting iPad time alone probably won't stop progression if the child stays indoors. Replacing iPad time with outdoor time will have a meaningful effect. The intervention is outdoor time — the removal of screens just clears the way for it.

See how risk factors affect your child's score

The app includes near-work hours and parental myopia as inputs to the risk score — alongside axial length measurements.

Check full risk profile →

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Sources: Wu PC et al. JAMA Ophthalmol. 2018;136(6):614–620 · Rose KA et al. Ophthalmology. 2008;115(8):1279–1285 · Xiong S et al. Ophthalmic Physiol Opt. 2017;37(3):267–278 · IMI 2025 Digest

This page is for educational purposes and does not constitute medical advice. MyopiaTracker is a decision-support tool — not a diagnostic device. MiSight® is a registered trademark of The Cooper Companies. Stellest® is a registered trademark of Essilor International. MiyoSmart® is a registered trademark of Hoya Corporation. Treatment availability and regulatory approval vary by country. Consult a qualified optometrist or ophthalmologist for personalised advice.

About the reviewer: Dr. Balamurali Vasudevan (BSOptom, PhD, FAAO, MBA) is an Associate Professor and Vision Science Lead at Midwestern University, AZ, with 54+ peer-reviewed publications and 20+ years in clinical vision science and myopia research. Former Senior Clinical Vision Scientist at Johnson & Johnson Vision Care. All clinical content on MyopiaTracker is reviewed for accuracy against primary literature before publication.
Related Resources
What actually causes myopia → Outdoor time — the real protective factor → Progression benchmarks → Calculator →